Rs. 1 Crore is not Enough to Retirement..!
by Ms. AARATI KRISHNAN, Financial Consultant
Do not fret. Start saving early and park your
money in inflation-beating investments.
I recently had an encounter on Facebook with
Sudhakar, an angry young man who blamed his parents for not saving enough to
tide over their retirement.
His father, he explained, had worked in the
private sector and received no pension.
He had spent much of his savings during his
working life on his children’s wedding and overseas education expenses.
He was now wholly reliant on Sudhakar for
support.
So, has Sudhakar learnt from his father’s
experience and saved up enough for retirement?
“Yes, I will have a Rs. 1 crore investment kitty
by the time I retire,” said the 35-year old, confidently.
But the irony is that a Rs. 1 crore corpus is
likely to leave Sudhakar just as short of money, when he retires, as his father
is today.
Not enough..!
To most salary earners, getting to a Rs. 1 crore
corpus is the holy grail of financial planning.
They imagine that, if their provident fund
contributions, insurance plans and sundry investments add up to that magic
number of Rs. 1 crore by the time they
retire then they are on the velvet.
But that is vastly under-estimating the impact of
age and inflation on our retirement plans.
To understand why Rs. 1 crore may not really solve Sudhakar’s
problems, let’s consider a simple calculation.
Ms. AARATI KRISHNAN, Financial Consultant |
Suppose Sudhakar incurs Rs. 50,000 towards his monthly living expenses
today and does not want to make any compromises on his lifestyle
post-retirement.
As he is only 35 years old, he has 25 years to go
before he retires (at 60).
At a 7% inflation rate, to retain the same
purchasing power as today, he will need to receive Rs. 2.71 lakh a month when
he retires (in 2041).
If he lives to the age of 85, he will effectively
be using up as much as Rs. 8.14 crore ( Rs. 2.71 lakh a month for 25 years) for
living expenses during his retirement years.
Assuming that his investment kitty at retirement
earns exactly the same returns as the inflation rate, Rs. 8.14 crore is therefore the sum that he will
need to save by 60, to see him through his sunset years.
Clearly, a Rs. 1-crore retirement kitty will far
short of his needs.
Or consider this from another perspective. A
person looking to retire today can set up a lifelong annuity of Rs. 50,000 a month (Rs. 6 lakh a year) under
LIC’s Jeevan Akshay VI, with an upfront investment of Rs. 64.2 lakh.
25 years later, assuming LIC is willing to offer
the same rates of return (which is unlikely by the way), he will need to set up
an annuity for Rs. 2.71 lakh a month ( Rs. 32.5 lakh a year) after accounting
for inflation. This will mean coughing up Rs. 3.48 crore.
Starting early..!
If Sudhakar’s problem has you chewing your nails,
there are two factors that can drastically alter your retirement needs - your
age and inflation rates.
If you are 55 years old and have the same
spending patterns as Sudhakar, you can probably get by with a much smaller
retirement kitty.
In five years’ time, your current living expenses
of Rs. 50,000 would have merely increased to Rs. 70,100 at a 7% inflation rate.
That means a starting retirement kitty of Rs. 2.1
crore can see you through the rest of your retired life (again we assume
returns on investments make up for inflation).
You can also pray for inflation rates to fall
steeply, given the RBI’s new inflation targeting role.
Inflation rates..!
If inflation averages a modest 5% over the next
25 years, instead of the 7% we have assumed, Sudhakar would need a retirement
kitty of Rs. 5.1 crore (instead of Rs. 8.1 crore). That’s not an easy ask, but
would still allow him to cut back on his current savings by a third.
But the above calculations actually over-simplify
the problem of how much to save for retirement.
One, they assume that the returns on your
investment after retirement will fortuitously match prevailing inflation rates.
But that may not happen.
There have been many periods in India when the
returns from safe investment options, like bank deposits, have not kept up with
inflation on a post-tax basis.
To remedy this, you will have to either bump up
your savings during your working years.
Or you will have to bite the bullet on risk and
allocate 10% to 20% of your corpus to risky investments like equities, to
improve your returns.
Two, the calculations also presume that you only
need to budget for your basic living expenses after you hang up your boots.
What if you want to vacation abroad, leave something to your children or / ,
worse, face a medical emergency?
Your carefully made retirement plans can then go
awry. This is why it pays to budget for a little extra while saving towards
retirement.
But here’s a final piece of good news. If the
numbers being bandied about here worry you, do note that they too are bloated
by the inflation effect.
By starting to save towards your retirement early
in your working life, and making a conscious shift to inflation-beating
investments, you can ensure that both inflation and time can be put to work in
your favour.
Sudhakar, therefore, has no need to despair. If
he can save nearly Rs. 45,000 a month
(that includes his provident fund contributions, bank deposits, mutual funds et
al) in his remaining working years, and earns a return of about 12%, the Rs.
8-crore retirement kitty will be well within his reach.
https://in.linkedin.com/in/aarati-krishnan-b0944864
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